The Blue Jackets announced they’ve recalled defenseman Dysin Mayo from AHL Cleveland. They’ve been operating with an open roster spot since their initial submission earlier this month, so no corresponding transaction is required.
The move is spurred by an injury to veteran righty Erik Gudbranson, who’s sat out the last three games with an upper-body injury and remains day-to-day. Two of those three games were at home. They’re now headed to Dallas on a mini road trip and would presumably like Mayo around as extra insurance in case another injury arises.
If Mayo plays, it will be his first NHL appearance since February 2023 with the Coyotes. The 29-year-old signed a two-way deal with the Blue Jackets in the offseason. The depth defender cleared waivers during the preseason and has recorded two assists, four PIMs, and an even rating through his first four appearances for Cleveland.
His NHL work is hard to gauge since it all came on a patchwork Arizona defense corps in the 2021-22 and 2022-23 seasons. He logged 82 appearances in those two years, including 67 as a rookie after spending five seasons with their AHL affiliate in Tucson. He’s been a decently stable two-way presence in the minors and even managed a 4-8–12 scoring line for the Yotes, but his defensive stats are understandably subpar. Overtaxed out of the gate (he played over 20 minutes per game in 2021-22), he has a career -30 rating with a CF% of just 40.1 and an xGF% of 37.8 at even strength.
Mayo, a 6’0″ righty, plays a similar physical brand to the injured Gudbranson. His 129 hits actually led Arizona’s defensemen in 2021-22. Summoning him ahead of higher-ceiling youngsters like Corson Ceulemans and Stanislav Svozil is no accident. Inserting him in the lineup would give Columbus an even lefty/righty balance again after dressing four lefties and two righties in Gudbranson’s absence. Jake Christiansen, who started the year as the Blue Jackets’ healthy extra but was forced into action with Gudbranson’s injury, has a -1 rating through three showings and has skated just 8:37 of ice time per game, absurdly low for a defender.
Mayo can remain on Columbus’ NHL roster for up to 30 days or play 10 games until he needs to clear waivers again to return to Cleveland.